As an exercise in masochism, all this month I’ll be looking
at episodes from U.N.C.L.E.’s dismal fourth and final season. First up: the utterly
ridiculous season premiere.
Napoleon visits the Berlin headquarters of U.N.C.L.E.’s Northeast
division to inspect the security system in advance of Summit-Five, a meeting of
U.N.C.L.E.’s five division chiefs. He’s led around the building by the snooty chief
enforcement agent, Strothers (Lloyd Bochner, making his second appearance on
this show after “The See-Paris-And-Die Affair”), and a communications expert
named Newman (Don Chastain). When an alarm goes off, Newman realizes the building’s
security has been grievously compromised*. He barricades himself inside the
office of the absent division chief and places an emergency call to Mr. Waverly
in New York. The call is cut off; when Napoleon breaks down the office door, he
discovers Newman’s freshly-murdered corpse.
*We will never find out how security was compromised, or why
the alarm sparked such a panic in Newman. This is business as usual for season
four. If you’re the type of person who gets vexed by things like loose plot
threads or a lack of internal logic, this season is guaranteed to drive you
batty.
Back in New York, Mr. Waverly briefs Illya on the situation:
Newman was almost certainly killed by a THRUSH mole deeply embedded in the
Berlin office. THRUSH is presumably trying to discover the location of
Summit-Five to murder all of U.N.C.L.E.’s top leaders in one fell swoop. Since
Waverly has no faith in Napoleon’s ability to find the mole and plug the leak
before the summit, he sends Illya to Berlin to tackle the problem.
Meet Lisa Rogers (Barbara Moore), Mr. Waverly’s assistant
and this season’s new addition to the regular cast. Lisa doesn’t bring much to
the table apart from good looks, poorly-concealed contempt for her job, and the
ability to work the hell out of a turtleneck, but honestly, the same can be
said about Illya for much of this relentlessly mediocre season, so I shan’t
bust Lisa’s chops too much.
There are a ton of really bizarrely framed shots in this
episode. Somewhere along the line, The
Man From U.N.C.L.E. decided to get artsy, and while I’m usually a big
supporter of pretentious nonsense, I’m having a tough time sorting out the
logic behind this. For instance, in this shot, I’m not at all sure why the camera
needed to be focused squarely on Mr. Waverly’s ass:
And shots like this make me want to take the director
of photography out for a stiff margarita and a comforting shoulder to cry on. This
is a transparent call for help.
In Berlin, division chief Harry Beldon (Albert Dekker) returns
to U.N.C.L.E. headquarters following a mission in Helsinki. Dressed in a long
fur coat and adorable matching cap, he tumbles out of a limousine filled with
cheerful champagne-swilling floozies.
Illya, Napoleon, Strothers, and Beldon’s near-sighted
assistant Helga (Susanne Cramer) peer out of Beldon’s office windows and dourly
observe the spectacle of his arrival. Illya sniffs that Beldon is “…everything
a cautious, unobtrusive, successful secret agent shouldn’t be.”
This is a partial list of disguises Illya has donned over
the course of the series:
2. Chinese rickshaw driver.
3. Motorcycle-riding Native American youth.
4. Mongolian warlord.
5. The Abominable Snowman.
Cautious. Unobtrusive. Successful. Glass houses, Illya.
Glass houses.
In his office, which is furnished with all manner of gaudy and
exotic knickknacks, Beldon cavorts around in a fur-lined bathrobe paired with
flip-flops and a distressing lack of pants while forcing Illya to fetch him brandy.
Beldon proclaims that the THRUSH mole must be one of the three agents who were
in the vicinity of his office at the time of Newman’s murder: Helga, Strothers,
or Napoleon. Then he strips off his bathrobe and, while Illya and Napoleon look
moderately scandalized by his behavior, wanders naked into his personal
mid-office sauna. Beldon is a one-man party.
In an attempt to uncover the traitor, Illya secretly
monitors Strothers, while Napoleon shadows Helga. After Helga climbs into the
backseat of a car with an unidentified sinister man, Napoleon impersonates a
chauffeur and drives them around town while secretly relaying information about
their movements to Illya, Strothers, and Beldon. More bizarre camera work
ensues.
Napoleon drives Helga and the unidentified man to a harbor,
where the man reveals to Napoleon that he’s been aware of his identity all
along. Acting upon inside information fed to him by another double agent inside U.N.C.L.E., he’s used Napoleon to lead
Beldon, Illya, and Strothers into an ambush.
THRUSH goons open fire on Illya and the others. During the
resulting skirmish, the car containing Helga and her THRUSH accomplice explodes
into a blazing fireball. Beldon examines Helga’s charred corpse. “Poor Helga, not
that she was ever beautiful,” he observes sadly. Well, sure. After your trusted
aide-turned-enemy spy dies a horrible death in the act of betraying you, your very first response should be to evaluate
her overall bangability. Crap like this is probably what drove Helga to join
THRUSH in the first place, Beldon. A key to a safe deposit box is found on
Helga’s body; inside the box, Illya and Napoleon find a copy of Napoleon’s official
file, complete with notes about the time and date of Summit-Five, suggesting
that—wait for it—Napoleon is the mole.
Napoleon insists he’s been framed, but Strothers hauls him
off to interrogate the stuffing out of him. A very long and very goofy sequence
ensues, in which Strothers bombards Napoleon with bright lights and spins him
in circles and yells at him a lot. It’s repetitive and tedious and leaden, and
it goes on for a loooooooooooong time. However, it does provide Robert Vaughn with an unbroken seven-minute stretch of
pure, uncut scenery chewing, and it culminates gloriously with
Napoleon clinging to Strothers’ leg while sobbing brokenly and begging to be
allowed to see Illya, so all is forgiven.
Shine on, Robert Vaughn. You are one of American television’s
greatest living treasures.
Anyway, as much crap as I give season four (and it deserves
it, oh, it deserves it), this episode contains one of the most brilliant and
charming scenes in the history of this brilliant and charming series: Napoleon,
having confessed under duress to being a THRUSH spy, is locked up in a cell; Illya,
who refuses to even consider the possibility of his partner’s guilt, visits
him. Realizing the cell is bugged, they put on an amazing pantomime for the
benefit of potential eavesdroppers, in which they snarl abuse at each other and
fake a vigorous physical altercation (in the interest of verisimilitude,
Napoleon hauls off and punches Illya in the face), all while Illya casually retrieves
the lock-picking tools he keeps stashed in
his back molar and breaks his partner out of the cell. It is, in all
seriousness, a flat-out wonderful scene.
Illya and Napoleon head to Helga’s apartment in search of clues
as to the identity of the real mole. They find Beldon there, hanging out with a
couple of corpses—THRUSH infiltrators whom he had no choice but to kill, he
assures them. Also in the apartment is Helga, alive and well, having faked her
death in the explosion.
Back in Beldon’s office, Helga insists she was lured into a
life of evil by her lover, Strothers. Even though Strothers vehemently denies
Helga’s allegations, he’s taken into custody. Satisfied that the mole has been
caught, Illya contacts Mr. Waverly and gives him the all-clear to proceed with
the summit as scheduled.
But wait! As soon as he learns the time and location of the
summit, Beldon exposes himself to Illya and Napoleon as the real traitor within U.N.C.L.E. At the
summit, he’s going to have Waverly and the other division heads murdered, leaving
all of U.N.C.L.E. in the hands of THRUSH.
…I keep feeling like there must be hidden messages embedded
in the staging and camera work of this episode, because it’s all just so weird.
Having revealed his fiendish plan, Beldon locks Illya and
Napoleon in his sauna and tries to kill them with poison gas. Or maybe he’s
just trying to open all their pores with a therapeutic blast of steam heat; it’s
not entirely clear what’s going on, which is all too typical for this episode.
Illya whips out his handy back-molar lock picks again and frees them.
Meanwhile, Mr. Waverly, Beldon, and the other three
U.N.C.L.E. division chiefs arrive at a remote location. Before Summit-Five can
commence, a horde of THRUSH goons storm the place and, acting on Beldon’s
orders, round everyone up at gunpoint.
Napoleon and Illya commandeer a helicopter (Napoleon, who
has the perfect outfit for every task, somehow scrounges up an adorable white
jumpsuit and black turtleneck to wear while piloting it). They soar off to the
summit location. “I’ll put it down behind the hill,” Napoleon says. “Can you
put it down quietly?” Illya asks,
whereupon Napoleon throws him his most withering look.
Before Beldon can give the order to have the Waverly and the
other unit leaders killed, Napoleon and Illya (who managed to sneak up on the
summit without anyone noticing, so apparently Napoleon could, in fact, set the
helicopter down quietly) arrive and attack. In the resulting skirmish, Illya
goes mano-a-mano against Beldon, who whips out a hand grenade and blows himself
up.
The summit is saved! Back in New York, Waverly informs
Napoleon and Illya that Strothers, despite being pretty much the only agent in
the entire Berlin office who didn’t
ultimately turn out to be an enemy spy, is getting booted out of U.N.C.L.E. all
the same (presumably for being so badly compromised on this assignment, though
why the same criteria isn’t applied to Napoleon—who, after all, actually
confessed to being a THRUSH spy—is a mystery). Of Strothers, Napoleon says, “He
did have one indispensable value.” Illya finishes his thought: “Yes, quite
unlike Beldon, he was reassuringly unlikeable.” And the episode ends with Napoleon
and Illya having a hearty chuckle about how some innocent dude they didn’t like
very much got fired for doing his job.
Season Four, you’re off to a downright strange start. And it’s
all downhill from here.
Comments
I hope your cold feels better!
Hamlette: Oh, yes. Illya wore a wig to go undercover in a Native American tribe. It is... well, it's not terribly convincing. I imagine I'll get to recapping the episode at some point, but to tide you over, there's a gallery of images from it here (you have to scroll way, way down to the bottom of the page). Breathtaking, right?